Life Needs More Green Lights

Ship time indicates the typical time it takes for your item(s) to leave our facilities. This includes any framing or customizing services ordered as well as careful packaging to prevent damage in transit.

Items that ship same day normally leave our facilities on the same business day if your order is placed before 5:00pm EST.

Orders that contain multiple items with different ship times will be shipped out based on the item with the longest ship time.

I purchased this 22x42 inch poster without buying a frame at the same time. It's been a challenge finding a cheap frame in this size (without custom ordering). If you're interested in having it framed (for a good price), I recommend framing when you purchase the artwork.

Overall this is a very nice product, however I was disappointed to find that the mounting option I chose,on wood, seemed to remove an additional quarter inch or so from the overall picture. Normally this may not be a problem, however there was partial lettering at the bottom of the picture I chose. Losing the additional quarter inch, left those "oh so important" letters illegible. Not nice. Since it was a gift, and those letters were important to the overall message....I was left with trying to explain what the picture was "supposed" to mean. Uncomfortable and disappointing!

Photos To ART

Decorate with photos you love. With Photos to Art, you can transform your favorite snapshots into one-of-a-kind works of art that you’ll be proud to hang on your wall. Choose from artistic canvas, custom framing, wood mounting and more to update your décor with art that is totally you.

ABOUT

The Print

The Artist

Rodney White gives his painting “Life Needs More Green Lights,” the richly weathered look of an old advertisement with a wry slogan for the person who likes the open road. An Atlanta-based artist, White uses the influence and appearance of an advertisement to promote positive messages instead of products. Believing that the past contains valuable lessons, he replicates surfaces and objects that have an “aged, experienced look” which he gets from flea markets, antique shops, old buildings, packages and time-worn paper.

Atlanta-based contemporary artist Rodney White is known for his richly weathered, urban retooling of retro ads that are partially obscured, like ideas that are on the verge of being attained. White uses the influential appearance of an advertisement in his art to promote positive messages instead of products. Believing that the past contains valuable lessons, he replicates surfaces and objects that have an “aged, experienced look.” White’s uplifting imagery is inspired by flea markets, antique shops, old buildings, packages and time-worn paper.